From today's Leicester Mercury:
University set to pay tribute to Rev Jesse Jackson
Civil rights campaigner the Rev Jesse Jackson will receive an honorary degree from De Montfort University next week.
Rev Jackson, who twice ran for president in America in the 1980s, will be the keynote speaker when the university hosts a major conference on preventing terrorism on Tuesday.
The conference has been organised by Parliament's powerful Home Affairs Select Committee, chaired by city MP Keith Vaz, which is looking at the causes of terrorism and radicalisation in the UK.
The university's vice-chancellor Professor Dominic Shellard said: "We share Rev Jackson's values throughout our university community.
"We are very pleased to welcome him to DMU and honour his numerous achievements as an inspirational advocate and campaigner for civil rights in the USA and around the world."
Mr Vaz, who represents Leicester East, said: "This conference is set to contribute significantly to the conversation on radicalisation and I am looking forward to hearing from Rev Jackson when he delivers his keynote speech next Tuesday.
"The roots of violent radicalisation remains a subject of great national interest and this prestigious institution, with its reputation for hosting and furthering national debates, is the perfect location."
The conference's findings will be passed to the Government as it creates its Prevent Strategy, which is designed to stop people becoming terrorists or supporting terrorism.
Rev Jackson's keynote speech will look into the lessons to be learned from the US experience of tackling radicalisation.
After the conference, he will receive his honorary degree at a ceremony at the St Mary De Castro Church, adjacent to the university campus, in front of hundreds of invited guests.
Other speakers at the conference include Ian Paisley Junior MP, who will discuss his experiences in Northern Ireland, as well as Home Office security minister James Brokenshire and Dr Dipu Moni, the Foreign Minister for Bangladesh.
The threat from the far right as well as religious fanaticism will also be considered.
Heightened security is expected to be in place across the campus due to the number of high-profile political figures at the event.
Rev Jackson last visited the city in 2008.
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